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Introduction

The world has never had peace. Somewhere—and often in many places at once—there has always been war. Isolated tribes have lived in peace, but few countries have avoided war for long. In one way or another, though, and by one means or another, most people want peace—including those who make war for the sake of peace. Movement for peace is present in the desire for peace that is common to human beings; in the institutionalizing of that desire by governmental efforts; and in the pacifist rejection of any and all war.

There are no self-confessed aggressors. In the 20th century almost every country changed the name of its war ministry or war department to the ministry or department of defense; manipulation of the language has become a fact of combat. Even in the age of nuclear weapons that beset the world in the mid-20th century, war has not been abandoned—only kept below the level of mutual annihilation. Meanwhile, in the face of violence, peace movements have grown.

Pacifism

As a word, pacifism came into common use at the beginning of the 20th century. As a movement, though, pacifism is as old as Buddhism. More than 500 years before the birth of Christ, Siddhartha Gautama, known as the Buddha, or “the Enlightened One,” was teaching that it is wrong to harm any living creature. In ancient Greece, Socrates argued that the good man would never injure another person.

For sometime before the Christian era, the Essenes, a Jewish sect in Palestine, preached nonviolence. The Roman Empire established a period of tranquillity known as the Pax Romana, but peace was kept by a military structure and applied only to the Roman world.

Christ warned, very late in his ministry, that those who take the sword shall perish by the sword. The rise of Christianity gave impetus to pacifism; but during the Middle Ages it almost disappeared, mainly because Christian emperors who then controlled the declining Roman Empire had to fend off attacks from invaders. A “defensive” war against aggression thus became widely accepted as a “just” war. In enunciating the church doctrine of the just war, St. Augustine said in the 5th century that a Christian may fight only in obedience to lawful authority and for the sake of the peace that would follow. He lamented the necessity for war in any case.

Pacifism reappeared after the Middle Ages. Anabaptists, Mennonites, and Quakers openly repudiated wars fought for whatever reason. In the 20th century the Indian leader Mohandas Gandhi inspired pacifists with the creed of nonviolence with which he led his country to independence from British rule.

Even those who accept war have always condemned it. In his account of the Peloponnesian War, the ancient Greek historian Thucydides quotes a statesman as saying, “That war as an evil is a proposition so familiar to everyone that it would be tedious to develop it.” Niccoló Machiavelli, the Florentine diplomat and tutor of princes, said, “There are two ways of contesting, the one by law, the other by force; the first method is proper to men, the second to beasts.”

Societies for Peace

Organized nongovernmental peace movements began in 1815 in New York City. In 1843 the first international peace congress met in London, England. By 1914 there were about 160 peace societies in the world. Some, such as the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, have been heavily subsidized and intensely active in working for international goodwill; but most have been affiliated with governments or international power blocs and have gone along with them when war threatened or erupted.

This has generally been the case of the world’s Socialist parties, which were established on what was thought to be the bedrock of international brotherhood and “the parliament of the world.” The United States Socialist leader Eugene V. Debs went to jail during World War I for interfering with recruitment for the armed forces. Running for president from his prison cell, he received 1 million votes. That event, however, was the peak—or past the peak—of truly international Socialism.

At the outbreak of World War I, the French antiwar Socialist leader Jean Jaurès was assassinated, and Socialist members of both the French and the German parliaments voted war credits to their respective governments. Today’s Socialists—or as they call themselves, Social Democrats—have almost uniformly abandoned pacifism. They have come to power from time to time in England, France, the Scandinavian countries, and post-Nazi Germany.

Efforts for Arbitration

At the close of the 19th century, terror of war began to overspread the old imperial world of Europe and make its way to the United States. The terror produced an armaments buildup, which in turn intensified the terror. The Pan American Union was organized under United States auspices in 1888–90 to promote peace in the Americas, and the Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907 were called with the same objective for Europe. In all cases, however, the governments involved refused to submit to compulsory arbitration of disputes; and the arms race went on, ending in World War I.

The League of Nations grew out of World War I. Retention of national sovereignty was built into its charter; so Germany, Italy, and Japan had only to walk out when the League challenged their sovereign right to aggression. The League in 1920 established the Permanent Court of International Justice at The Hague, Netherlands. The court settles disputes that the parties bring before it. The court has no power to summon disputants or to enforce its decisions.

In 1928–29, more than 60 countries signed the Kellogg-Briand Pact to keep the peace; but the arms race went on, ending in World War II. The horror of that war spurred the search for a workable peace plan. Before the war ended, representatives of 50 countries met in San Francisco, Calif., and drew up a charter for a new world peace organization, the United Nations (UN). Like the League of Nations, the UN can function effectively only in matters that the members are willing to leave to its jurisdiction—usually noncontroversial or minimally controversial matters such as fishing rights, sea and air lanes, or prevention of epidemic diseases. The UN veto enables the nations that hold permanent seats on the Security Council to override any action against one or another of them; the powerful UN members refuse to allow their internal affairs to come before it. (See alsoarbitration; Hague Peace Conferences; international relations; League of Nations; United Nations; World War I; World War II.)

Toward Reducing Armaments

The first Hague Conference failed to reduce armaments. Early in the 20th century Great Britain proposed to Germany that their countries agree to limit the size of their navies, but Germany refused. Compulsory limitation of armaments began in 1919 at the Paris peace conference following World War I. The victorious Allies compelled Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Bulgaria to agree to observe the army and navy limitations imposed on them by peace treaties. The Allies announced that these limitations were the first step toward the “initiation of a general limitation of armaments of all nations.” The Council of the League of Nations was given the responsibility to prepare reduction programs for member nations of the League. In 1932, after ten years of preparation, a disarmament conference was held in Geneva, Switzerland. Afraid of invasion or economic strangulation, each country involved was insistent upon armed security. International suspicions proved stronger than goodwill, and the conference ended in failure.

Limitation on Navies

Naval limitation was more successful for a time. In 1922 United States President Warren G. Harding called a conference in Washington, D.C. There, the United States, Great Britain, Japan, Italy, and France agreed on a “naval holiday.” At the London Conference on Naval Armament in 1936 and again in 1937 treaties signed by the great powers did not limit the size of navies, except for that of Germany. A worldwide naval race began at once.

More Pleas for Peace

The 20th century saw the first world wars and the first worldwide movement for peace. The second development inevitably followed the first. The two world wars changed both the character of war and the character of the world. In World War I, men faced one another with the weapon to end all weapons: the machine gun. The classic concept of the “war in place” was not affected by the introduction of primitive biplanes into warfare.

Within a quarter of a century, however, the airplane had replaced the “war in place” with the “war of movement.” The whole world—with its cities, towns, and villages—was one battlefield. War became total, and no place on Earth was safe from it.

Between the wars, the Quaker pacifists and their associates made a great impact on young people. Frequent guest speakers on college campuses were Norman Thomas, perennial Socialist candidate for president of the United States; Frederick J. Libby of the National Council for the Prevention of War; and A.J. Muste of the worldwide Fellowship of Reconciliation. Many religious leaders also turned to pacifism; and secular groups such as the War Resisters League and the Committee for Nonviolent Action propagated the peace doctrine among young and old social activists.

Before the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, public opinion polls showed that a majority of the people in the United States opposed intervention in World War II. The United States Congress actually debated a constitutional amendment requiring that a national plebiscite precede a declaration of war. Pearl Harbor, like the sinking of the Lusitania during World War I, suggests that it takes more than public opinion to prevent war—though the public was credited with helping to end American involvement in Vietnam. (See alsoUnited States, “History”; Vietnam War.)

The Vietnam Influence

A generalized protest movement among young people all over the world characterized the 1960s. The movement took a variety of forms. It swept pacifism up among the burgeoning “causes.” The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., winner of the Nobel peace prize in 1964, was a significant figure not only in the struggle for racial desegregation in the United States but also in his emphasis on nonviolence in dealing with both racism and war. Pacifism lost its clearly defined character in these years, and the peace movement came to include advocates of violence as well as advocates of nonviolence—illegal as well as legal actions. The shift was notable from legally approved pacifism in the form of exemption from military service to a broader struggle against war—especially against a particular war rather than war in general.

Peace movements have been active in Japan, the country that is unique in knowing first-hand the effects of atomic bombing. Under its postwar constitution, Japan was dedicated to permanent pacifism. By 1950, however, changed world conditions had brought about challenges to the concept of Japanese pacifism; and a movement began toward limited rearmament for purposes of self-defense. Many Japanese remained opposed to the idea. In 1966 the Japan Peace for Vietnam Committee sponsored a conference in Tokyo between United States and Japanese representatives.

Hundreds of thousands of Americans took part in peace marches, peace demonstrations, and peace vigils during the war in Vietnam. Many people, including such eminent men as King, the influential pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock, and President John W. Ward of Amherst College, were arrested for civil disobedience while taking part in antiwar demonstrations. Many senators, congressmen, clergymen, and educators demanded “Peace Now.” Jeannette Rankin, the first woman elected to the United States Congress (1916) and who voted against entry into both world wars, led 10,000 women to Washington, D.C., in January 1968 to protest the war in Vietnam.

The assassinations in 1968 of King and of United States Senator Robert F. Kennedy removed two leading figures who sympathized with peace movements. As the war in Vietnam went on and tensions heightened within the United States, the divergence widened between the “antiwar” groups and the “peace” movements.

While severely critical of United States military intervention in Vietnam, traditional peace groups urged action within processes of education and elections. These groups included the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, the United World Federalists, the World Without War Council, and the Fellowship of Reconciliation.

By 1970 the United States military structure confronted a peace movement within its own ranks. In 1971 about 1,000 Vietnam veterans camped in Washington, D.C., to lobby for an immediate end to the war. Within the services, underground newspapers appeared on army posts and groups such as the Concerned Officers Movement were formed.

Conscientious Objectors

Between the world wars, the United States officially recognized conscientious objection to military service on religious grounds. Noncombatant duty, usually in the army medical corps, was provided for draftees who would accept it (notably members of the Disciples of Christ), and public service in civilian work was an alternative for the conscripts who would not perform any functions related to the military. These mainly were Mennonites, Quakers, and members of the Church of the Brethren. Several European countries also legally recognized conscientious objection.

On June 15, 1970, the United States Supreme Court held that conscientious objection could be sustained on moral or philosophical grounds as well as on religious grounds. The number of draftees accepted for conscientious objector status rose steeply during the Vietnam War. The United States peacetime draft, which began in 1948, was suspended in July 1973. It remained on standby, however, under the Selective Service Act.

By the time the Vietnam truce was signed in January 1973 there were an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 United States draft resisters and deserters in exile, mostly in Canada and Sweden; 10,000 resisters or deserters in civilian or military prisons, on probation, or facing court action; 80,000 resisters and deserters hiding underground in the United States; 300,000 Vietnam veterans with less-than-honorable discharges; and an unknown number of United States civilians charged with antiwar acts. These numbers dwarfed the estimated 10,000 conscientious objectors who were given alternative service.

Amnesty

With the nominal end of United States participation in the Vietnam War, the issue of amnesty arose. Amnesty is the act of pardoning individuals for their violations of the law. Governmental amnesty declarations have been used most often to forgive persons who rebelled against the law because of internal conflicts or foreign wars.

In United States history, amnesty has been granted in one form or another after a number of major conflicts. Vietnam, however, differed from earlier wars in that it was an undeclared war that, over a period of time, lost the support of a great number of United States citizens. After the war, much of the population favored conditional amnesty. Some opposed amnesty, mainly because of the personal sacrifice of those who had served.

In January 1977 President Jimmy Carter issued a pardon to Vietnam-era draft evaders. The pardon applied to those who had evaded the draft between Aug. 4, 1964, and March 28, 1973. It did not apply to military deserters, to persons who had used force or violence, or to Selective Service employees.

Balance of Terror

The war in Southeast Asia in the 1960s and early 1970s stimulated world peace movements. Spokesmen for peace mobilized support to improve relations between East and West—relations that deteriorated after World War II into a Cold War and an arms race. The United States and the Soviet Union became capable of destroying each other and could not hope to defend themselves against instant retaliation. Thus, what Great Britain’s Winston Churchill called the “balance of terror” still preserved the peace.

In 1963 a nuclear test-ban treaty was signed in Moscow by Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and the United States. It prohibited the exploding of nuclear devices in the air, in outer space, or underwater. More than 100 countries later signed the treaty.

In 1968 the UN General Assembly approved the Treaty for the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. It provided that nations having nuclear arms would not help other nations develop or procure them and that nonnuclear countries would not receive or manufacture such weapons. In 1969 the United States and the Soviet Union ratified the treaty and began the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT). By 1972 these negotiations resulted in a Treaty on the Limitation of Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems and an interim agreement on limiting strategic offensive arms. In May 1972, at a Moscow summit, final compromises were reached by United States President Richard M. Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. Under the interim agreement, the two countries pledged to freeze the number of their intercontinental missiles for five years while negotiations continued. Both countries were free, however, to improve their weapons systems.

Talks on the control of strategic offensive weapons, the SALT II negotiations, resulted in the Treaty on the Limitation of Strategic Offensive Weapons, signed in June 1979 by President Carter and Secretary Brezhnev in Vienna, Austria. The treaty’s provisions included reductions in nuclear arms and restraints on the development of new weapons. The treaty was not ratified by the United States Senate, and the arms race continued. In December 1987 President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev signed the intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF) treaty, which called for the elimination, rather than just the limitation, of an entire class of nuclear weapons delivery systems. The treaty was ratified by both countries in 1988. Negotiations concerning long-range arsenals produced the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START) treaty in 1991. Under that and subsequent agreements, the United States and former Soviet powers began steadily reducing their arsenals. (See alsodisarmament.)

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